Open Safari, drop in your photos, get a PDF back. No app install, no signup, no daily limit.
Open Safari, drop in your photos, get a PDF back. No app install, no signup, no daily limit.
PDFWix's iPhone photo-to-PDF flow accepts every format Safari can hand off: HEIC and HEIF (the default for iPhone 7 and later), JPG and JPEG, PNG, WebP, GIF (first frame only), BMP and TIFF. Decoding happens in your browser via WebAssembly so HEIC works even on Windows or Android browsers that don't natively understand the format. For best output quality: shoot in well-lit conditions and hold the phone parallel to the document to avoid keystoning, use Apple's built-in document scanner (Notes app → camera icon → Scan Documents) for paperwork because it auto-crops, deskews and removes shadows before saving as PDF or JPG, pick A4 or US Letter page size for anything that may be printed and Fit-to-image for receipts/screenshots so there's no white border, and leave the quality slider at 90% (visually lossless on every screen and prints cleanly up to A4). If the resulting PDF is too large for an email attachment, run it through Compress PDF afterwards — the Recommended preset typically halves the size with no visible quality loss.
Slightly — the JPG inside a PDF is the same JPG the camera captured, but PDFWix downscales over-large images for sane file sizes. Use the 'Original' quality setting if exact fidelity matters.
Yes. PDFWix accepts HEIC, JPG and PNG and converts everything to a single PDF. iOS may also auto-convert HEIC → JPG when sharing — either path works.
No. PDFWix has no per-day or per-hour cap on the free web app.